Running in Singapore: Marathons coming up and how to get started

Updated on 29th September 2016 by Catherine Willingham|

Lots of brave new runners were out there last month, determined that 2014 is their year to shape up and get fit. In future instalments of our regular running column, we’ll share favourite routes and talk about shoes, gadgets, treadmills, nutrition, racing, hashing, children’s running and much more. This month, Verne Maree gives some pointers on getting started.

People who try running and don’t like it often say that it’s boring. I think it’s truer to say that it’s hard until you’ve become used to it, and that takes time.

That said, my own initiation 24 years ago was spectacularly tedious. Friend Jackie and I signed up with Run/Walk for Life, which held sessions at various fields all over South Africa. Along with assorted others – none of whom we fancied even a bit – we jogged around Bulwer Park Primary School field, three times a week, week after mind-numbing week.

Their reasoning was spot-on. To avoid injury, it’s vital to start slowly and gradually, and that’s because tendons and ligaments take longer to build up than your lung capacity does. Also, grass is kinder to joints than pavements and tarred roads.

Only after three months, when our distance was up to about 8km and we’d almost lost the will to live, we tried our first 4km in the hilly neighbourhood. From then on, what kept me going was the terrible dread of being sent back to the field.

Walk, Don’t RunTwenty-five years later, the thinking is different. Current advice to new runners is to start with 30 minutes of walking interspersed with brief spells of running – as little as a minute at a time to start with – and gradually extending the running until it takes up the entire 30 minutes. When you want to increase the total time or distance, make sure it’s by no more than 10 percent a week.

I had to do this myself about five years ago, after I’d broken my right foot. At the end of eight weeks in a moonboot, it was a month before I could walk for the required 30 minutes, and then another couple of months to work up to 5km. So it’s tough, but doable.

5-point starter plan

#1 Pick a timeEarly morning or evening are best. The joy of mornings is that it’s done, so nothing that crops up can mess up your running plan.

#2 Decide on a routePreferably flat, to start with – from home, or from a park or somewhere else scenic. It can be helpful to do the same route until you’re fully on track.

#3 Commit to a programmeI like coolrunning.com’s nine-week Couch-to-5K programme. It proposes three manageable workouts a week: you start with jog-walking for 20 minutes and end up running 30 minutes non-stop.

#4 Get some kitSales staff at general sports shops here tend not to have the necessary expertise to fit you with proper running shoes. Try a specialist store like Running Lab, at Funan Centre and Velocity@Novena Square. And for a woman blessed with anything bigger than beestings, a “maximum impact” sports bra is an absolute must.

#5 Just do itMost importantly, diarise your run as you would any other appointment or commitment!